Stocks Gain With US Tax in Focus; Pound Rises: Markets Wrap

Stocks in Europe gained, following U.S. equities and most Asian benchmarks higher as optimism over U.S. tax reform overshadowed concerns about North Korea’s latest missile launch. The British pound strengthened after the U.K. cleared a major Brexit hurdle.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index headed for a three-week high, with most industry sectors in the green. Banks outperformed following a rally in U.S. lenders after Federal Reserve chair nominee Jerome Powell signaled he isn’t inclined to add to financial regulations. Asian stocks were mixed earlier, with gauges in Tokyo and Australia advancing while equities in Seoul dropped. U.S. benchmarks rose on Tuesday as the Senate budget committee advanced the Republican tax bill.

Elsewhere, U.K. gilts fell, the FTSE 100 stock index dropped and sterling jumped to a two-month high after Brexit negotiators agreed to an outline divorce deal. The dollar weakened and core European bonds declined with U.S. Treasuries. The euro gained as data from Germany’s regions showed inflation accelerating. Crude oil fell for a third day as U.S. inventories expanded before OPEC meets to decide on prolonging supply cuts past the end of March. Industrial metals extended a slide.

In Asia, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said his regime completed its nuclear program after firing a missile that put the entire U.S. in range. The launch shattered a two-month period of relative quiet in its first provocation since U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision this month to label the country a state sponsor of terrorism. Trump responded that “we will take care of that situation.”

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